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Tim Lester, my thoughts, FWIW

No one knows really what transpired during this process but Rob Howe was the only one mentioning Lester on Friday.

In-person interviews can really sway a decision as well as references. No one knows how Lester vs. Johns' interviewed with coach Ferentz and how they interacted with the coaching staff. Kirk said early on, that chemistry with the other coaches was critical for him. Members of the staff may have liked Lester better. Lester may have been better prepared for his interview, I would have watched game tape and come in with solutions to fix Iowa's shortfalls. No one knows.

Lester was a heck of a QB in college (close to 12,000 yards passing) and had solid offensive numbers at WMU (he called most of the plays). When he was at WMU, defense let him down. Something he won't have to worry about as OC at Iowa. He replaced Fleck at WMU who pulled his best players with him to Minny, which left holes in the roster.

I for one, am willing to give him time to turn things around. Bottom line, he has to better better than Brian.

There will most certainly be naysayers on this board. But some of them wouldn't have been happy with Mike Shanahan.

Brian Ferentz appreciation thread

I am of the belief that he was a decent coordinator. His downfall was being named QB coach. If you look at the numbers while O' keefe was QB coach the offense was a fairly efficient unit. Once they made him QB coach there was a very poor drop in passing efficiency every year.

Brian was a good player and representative of Iowa Football. And a better coach than people give him credit for.

Bill Ackman blasts Biden over Jordan drone attack that killed 3 US soldiers: ‘Weak American leadership’!

Bill Ackman laid blame for the drone attack that killed three American service members in Jordan over the weekend at the feet of President Biden — the latest broadside unleashed by the billionaire hedge fund manager against the 81-year-old commander-in-chief.

Ackman, who has urged Democrats to move on from Biden, said that the idea of giving the incumbent another four years in the White House is “dangerous and absurd.”

He echoed Republican lawmakers who assailed Biden over the weekend for failing to deter US enemies in the region, particularly Iran, which was blamed for the strike.

“Our enemies perceive weak American leadership, which has allowed them to attack us with impunity at a grave cost to our servicemen,” the 57-year-old founder and CEO of Pershing Square Capital Management wrote on his X social media account on Sunday.

Ackman, who has also urged continued US support for Ukraine in its effort to beat back Russian troops who have invaded the country, wrote that the US has “arrived at a place where our enemies do not fear us.”

Bill Ackman, the hedge fund billioinaire, blamed President Biden for the drone attack in Jordan that killed three US military service members. REUTERS “We are not respected, and the world is a much more dangerous place as a result,” Ackman wrote.

Our enemies perceive weak American leadership, which has allowed them to attack us with impunity at a grave cost to our servicemen.

For months, Ackman, who has raised his public profile with his fierce denunciations of Harvard administrators for their response to the Hamas attacks and anti-Israel sentimet among the student body, has been vocal about his view that Biden should decline to seek re-election.

The attack took place at a military base in northeastern Jordan — not far from the border with Syria.

In November, he opined that Biden is past his “peak” and should drop out of the race for the Democratic nomination for president.

Earlier this month, he warned that former President Donald Trump, who appears to be coasting to the GOP nomination following his victories in Iowa and New Hampshire, would “crush” Biden in a rematch in November.

Ackman has even donated $1 million to Phillips, the congressman who is the only Democratic lawmaker to challenge Biden.

Phillips and Marianne Williamson, the self-help author, are the only two Democrats who have officially declared their candidacies.

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What does Lester bring to the table?

First off I did care for Johns or Lester. What does Lester bring to the table? He has no recruits that want to come with him, He doesn't get a chance to bring any coaches with him. We have seen other B10 teams bring in new coaches that smokes anything we hire on offense. There are no players that will come to play for us on just his name recognition. KF had plenty of time to make a splash, but he chose not to. I feel KF was looking for someone to run his offense and Lester was the only guy that said he could and would do it.

Compelled patriotism teaches Iowa students the wrong lesson

Iowa House Republicans are considering a bill that would require public school students to sing the national anthem every day. It was enough to make Rep. Sue Cahill, a Democrat from Marshalltown, break into song.



Cahill asked lawmakers and onlookers to rise and sing the anthem at a subcommittee meeting on House Study Bill 587. What Cahill lacked in vocal skills was made up for with her zeal. Lawmakers sang. Lobbyists sang. Reporters, looking both amused and befuddled, recorded the whole thing.


Just when you think you’ve seen everything under the Golden Dome of Wisdom, you’re proven wrong.





Cahill was making a point. She argued that although the Statehouse is the perfect place to express patriotic fervor through song, forcing kids to sing it in school is different. For one thing, the bill requires that all students stand at attention, even if they don’t sing.


Cahill said that raises serious First Amendment issues. She voted against the bill. Her two Republican colleagues voted yes to keep the discussion going, they said.


“The school classroom is not the place for mandating the singing of the national anthem, thus mandating patriotism for students,” Cahill said. “I think that’s something students choose, and it’s something that they learn.”


You’ve got to love compelled patriotism. Just look at how happy all those North Koreans are, with frightened smiles pasted on their faces. But, boy, they sure love Kim Jong Un. Yep.


Iowa’s bill is sponsored by Rep. Skyler Wheeler, R-Orange City and one of the Legislature’s most active compellers. He led the charge last year to remove books from school libraries and erase all references to LGBTQ people from elementary school curriculum. In the past he did battle with Critical Race Theory and sought to ban the teaching of the 1619 Project. He also favors scrapping tenure at universities.


Specifically, his bill requires all teachers and students to sing at least one verse of the anthem daily. It’s probably the one that ends with “Play ball!” All teachers and students who are physically able to stand must do so and remove any “headdress” not worn for religious purposes. Students don’t have to sing the anthem, but they are required to stand “to show the full respect.”


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On some, special occasions, students will sign all four versus of the anthem. All four!


The bill would also amend social studies curriculum to include instruction on the words and meaning of the anthem, “the object and principles of the government of the United States, the sacrifices made by the founders of the United States, the important contributions made by all who have served in the armed forces of the United States … and how to love, honor and respect the national anthem.”


The bill would not apply to private schools.


A lot of this is already being taught. No one’s against learning about the government, the founders, the military, etc.


But this bill is really designed to send a message. Regurgitate the standard, rosy and conventional history of our country or there may be trouble. Nothing that makes anyone uncomfortable. And don’t even think of kneeling in protest, buster.


I have no problem with kids learning about the anthem, so long as kids learn about the most interesting aspect of the song’s story. And that’s the contradictory life of its author, Francis Scott Key.


Most of us know the basic facts. Key was on a British warship negotiating for a prisoner release during the War of 1812 on Sept. 13, 1814. He was still on the ship when the British began their bombardment of Fort McHenry, which protected Baltimore’s harbor. The Brits wouldn’t let him leave the ship.


At daybreak, Key saw the American flag was still flying over McHenry. He wrote a poem about what he had witnessed, which became our national anthem in 1931.


But you probably know less about the man than his poem. In a 2022 essay in the Baltimore Banner, University of Maryland professor Rona Kobell fills in some blanks.


Key’s family owned slaves. He married Mary Tayloe Lloyd, whose family also owned slaves, including Frederick Douglass. Key was an attorney and his law partner and friend was Roger Taney, who as a Supreme Court chief justice, handed down the infamous Dred Scott decision in 1857, declaring that all Blacks, slave and free, could never be U.S. citizens.


And yet, Key represented several Black families seeking freedom in court. Score one for Team FSK.


But Key also was a proponent of the colonization movement, which advocated sending slaves back to Africa. In a letter to Rev. Benjamin Tappan in 1838, Key wrote that Black Americans are “a distinct and inferior race of people, which all experience proves to be the greatest evil that afflicts the community.”


As a district attorney in Washington, D.C., Key prosecuted abolitionists, believing the property rights of slave owners outweighed the free speech of slavery’s opponents. One prosecution of a Black man wrongly charged with attempted murder sparked a riot.


The incongruity of his work and his poem was noted at the time by abolitionists who mocked Key’s version of America as the “Land of the Free and Home of the Oppressed.”


“He is a very representational figure in his racism and in the politics of slavery,” author Jefferson Morley told Kobell. His book “Snowstorm in August: Washington City, Francis Scott Key, and the Forgotten Race Riot of 1835″ digs into Key’s role in the riot.


So, teaching about Key is teaching what America was like before the Civil War, and the contradictions of men such as Key and Thomas Jefferson, who wrote “all men are created equal,” while owning slaves. The full details are far more compelling than the redacted version. That’s the beauty of studying history. Sift through a few layers and and you’ll learn the rest of the story.


But I doubt any of this will come up in Iowa schools. And that’s unfortunate. It simply doesn’t fit with our sunny historical mythology. Leave those layers alone. Just sing the song, kids, and then recite the Pledge of Allegiance, which has been required in Iowa schools since 2021.


What will happen to this bill? Who knows. It is the silly subcommittee season, when the Capitol’s rarefied air is filed with trial balloons. Many will pop.


But it does remind us that great nations don’t compel patriotism, fear protests or hide their history. Someone should write a song about that.


(319) 398-8262; todd.dorman@thegazette.com

MBB Top 25 Polls & NET (1/29)

AP Top 25 (1/29)
1. Connecticut (48) (18-2)
2. Purdue (14) (19-2)
3. North Carolina (17-3)
4. Houston (1) (18-2)
5. Tennessee (15-4)
6. Wisconsin (16-4)
7. Duke (15-4)
8. Kansas (16-4)
9. Marquette (15-5)
10. Kentucky (15-4)
11. Arizona (15-5)
12. Iowa State (16-4)
13. Creighton (16-5)
14. Illinois (15-5)
15. Texas Tech (16-3)
16. Auburn (16-4)
17. Utah State (18-2)
18. Baylor (14-5)
19. New Mexico (18-3)
20. Florida Atlantic (17-4)
21. Dayton (16-3)
22. BYU (15-5)
23. Oklahoma (15-5)
24. Alabama (14-6)
25. TCU (15-5)

Others Receiving Votes
South Carolina, San Diego State, Memphis, Northwestern, Mississippi, Texas, Colorado State, St. Mary's, Indiana State, Boise State, Gonzaga, Richmond, Virginia, McNeese State, Appalachian State

Dropped Out
Memphis (#19), Colorado State (#24)

=============================

Coaches Top 25 (1/29)
1. Connecticut (23) (18-2)
2. Purdue (8) (19-2)
3. North Carolina (17-3)
4. Houston (18-2)
5. Tennessee (15-4)
6. Wisconsin (16-4)
7. Duke (15-4)
8. Kentucky (15-4)
9. Kansas (16-4)
10. Marquette (15-5)
11. Iowa State (16-4)
12. Arizona (15-5)
13. Creighton (16-4)
14. Illinois (15-5)
15. Texas Tech (16-3)
16. Auburn (16-4)
17. Utah State (18-2)
18. Baylor (14-5)
19. Dayton (16-3)
20. New Mexico (18-3)
21. BYU (15-5)
22. Alabama (14-6)
23. Florida Atlantic (17-4)
24. Oklahoma (15-5)
25. TCU (15-5)

Others Receiving Votes
San Diego State, Mississippi, South Carolina, Gonzaga, Memphis, Northwestern, Colorado State, Indiana State, Texas, Grand Canyon, St. Mary's, McNeese State, Appalachian State, Virginia, Seton Hall, Cornell, Princeton

Dropped Out
Memphis (#22), Colorado State (#23)

=============================

NCAA NET (1/29)
1. Houston (18-2)
2. Purdue (19-2)
3. Tennessee
4. Arizona
5. Connecticut
6. BYU
7. Alabama
8. North Carolina
9. Auburn
10. Iowa State
11. Wisconsin
12. Kansas
13. Creighton
14. Illinois
15. New Mexico
16. Marquette
17. Dayton
18. Baylor
19. Duke
20. San Diego State
21. St. Mary's
22. Utah State
23. Kentucky
24. Indiana State
25. Michigan State
---------------------------
57. Iowa
59. Northwestern
60. Nebraska
68. Ohio State
81. Maryland
92. Minnesota
97. Indiana
99. Rutgers
101. Michigan
126. Penn State
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